Gigabyte Radeon HD 5770 SOC Review -
Radeon HD Series 5700 Technology

Radeon HD Series 5700 features

Today's tested product positions itself smack down in-between the Radeon HD 4850 and the Radeon 4870 in terms of performance. The Radeon HD 4870 which we all know and love for its performance has 956 million transistors embedded onto that die. The new Radeon HD 5700 GPUs have 1040 million transistors. Correct, that is 1+ billion transistors tucked away in a small chip. The fabrication node, just like the 5800 series, is 40nm for this product.

The reference Radeon HD 5770 will be clocked at 850 MHz. Its memory is clocked at 1200 MHz (4800 MHz effective).

The Gigabyte SOC 5770 is clocked slightly higher at 900 MHz and the memory is clocked at 1200 MHz (4800 MHz effective).

Shader processors then; similar to the Radeon HD 4850/4870/4890 the Radeon HD 5770 will have 800 Shader processors, with the 5750 having 720 Shader processors. Though that looks a little pale in comparison to the 5800 series, remember... these are mid-range products at really affordable prices (!).

The number of ROP units are rocking steady at 16 and sure -- texture units remain at 40 for the 5770 and 36 for the 5750. But before you get blinded by all the specs in a few lines of text, let's break down the card announced today in comparison to 2008's Radeon HD 4870.

Radeon HD 4870

Radeon HD 5750

GBT 5770SOC

Radeon HD 5870

Process

55nm

40nm

40nm

40nm

Transistors

956M

1.04B

1.04B

2.15B

Die Size

263 mm²

TBA

TBA

334 mm²

Core Clock

750 MHz

700 MHz

900 MHz

850 MHz

Shader Processors

800

720

800

1600

Compute Performance

1.2 TFLOPs

1.008 TFLOPs

1.38 TFLOPs

2.72 TFLOPs

Texture Units

40

36

40

80

Texture Fillrate

30.0 GTexels/s

25.2 GTexels/s

34 GTexels/s

68.0 GTexels/s

ROPs

16

16

16

32

Pixel Fillrate

12.0 GPixels/s

11.2 GPixels/s

13.6 GPixels/s

27.2 GPixels/s

Z/Stencil

48.0 GSamples/s

44.8 GSamples/s

54.4 GSamples/s

108.8 GSamples/s

Memory Type

GDDR5

GDDR5

GDDR5

GDDR5

Memory Clock

900 MHz

1150 MHz

1200

1200 MHz

Memory Data Rate

3.6 Gbps

4.6 Gbps

4.8 Gbps

4.8 Gbps

Memory Bandwidth

115.2 GB/s

73.6 GB/s

76.8 GB/s

153.6GB/s

Maximum Board Power (TDP)

160W

86W

120W

188W

Idle Board Power

90W

16W

18

27W

These numbers are reasonably good, for the money this is an excellent mid-range product series. Much of the magic is thanks to the fact that ATI sticks to DDR5 for their mid-range and high-end products. On the 5700 they'll crank it down a notch as we get 128-bit memory, cutting the bandwidth in half from 256-bit. However, since it's gDDR5 memory (quad data rate) it will still offer sufficient bandwidth.

So we established that the culprit of the 5700 series will be a cut off memory bandwidth, and this is the reason why its performance actually will be slightly lower (on average) than say a Radeon HD 4870.

However, you can expect the Radeon HD 5770 to outperform any current single-GPU based graphics card in the mid-range segment like the Radeon HD 4850 and GeForce GTS 250. And all that with a single chip utilizing less than roughly 120 Watts.

The SOC edition comes as stated with a custom designed PCB, the very best components and a custom cooler. Extended OC Guru software will allow you to increase voltage on both the GPU and memory as well. We'll look at that in detail in our overclock section though. But let's have a look at the product a little closer.

Gigabyte Z370N WIFI reviewIn this review we test the petite Gigabyte Z370N WIFI motherboard, this Mini ITX Form Factor based measures just 17x17cm, yet is as fast as its bigger bethrens. We'll pair it with the new six-core ...